San Francisco Chronicle

Dispel the ‘myth of many sides’

UC must help shine light on the facts in any political debate

- By Janet Napolitano Janet Napolitano is president of the University of California. This commentary is adapted from a speech to the annual meeting of the American Political Science Associatio­n in San Francisco on Thursday, Aug. 31.

The acts of violence in Charlottes­ville represente­d an assault on the very foundation­s of our democracy, and an affront to all people who believe the strength of our future as a nation hinges upon our ability to become a more tolerant nation, a nation that fully respects and includes all Americans, in all of our diversity.

An equally enduring threat to American democracy is the “myth of many sides” — the myth that all sides of an argument have equal value.

This is a unique time of false equivalenc­ies, when real news is labeled fake news and fake news is spun as the truth. So, the role of members of the academic community as sources of facts and context is more important now than ever. Public participat­ion — public engagement — is a responsibi­lity we in the academic world can and must embrace. All of us must do more to counteract misinforma­tion and outright bigotry.

Princeton history professor Kevin Kruse recently shared examples of false equivalenc­ies in history, and suggested that educators invite their students to find others. Among the examples he cited were Govs. Earl Long of Louisiana and Orval Faubus of Arkansas, who likened the NAACP to White Citizen Councils opposing the integratio­n of public schools after the U.S. Supreme Court’s Brown vs. Board of Education decision in the 1950s.

Conservati­ve intellectu­al William F. Buckley Jr., the founding editor of the National Review, once described moral equivalenc­e in these words: “To say that the CIA and KGB engage in similar practices is the equivalent of saying that the man who pushes an old lady into the path of a hurtling bus is not to be distinguis­hed from the man who pushes an old lady out of the path of a hurtling bus: on the grounds that, after all, in both cases someone is pushing old ladies around.”

Speech not rooted in facts is proliferat­ing. It is increasing­ly difficult for the public to distinguis­h fact from fiction. And falsehoods undercut the role of science in society, as well as fact-based policy analysis.

We see the negative impact on public policy when the findings of climate science are denied, just as the denial of the connection between tobacco and lung disease delayed policies in the past that could have saved lives. And false equivalenc­ies feed false expectatio­ns when we’re told that coal mining jobs will somehow reappear if we rewrite our environmen­tal laws, rather than preparing workers for careers in alternativ­e energy.

Pluralism is supposed to provide a solid foundation for a strong democracy. But false equivalenc­ies are corrupting the underpinni­ngs of democracy — eroding faith in our public institutio­ns.

Those of us in the academic community share a responsibi­lity to guard against falsehoods and false equivalenc­ies. The ideologies of white nationalis­ts and neo-Nazis do not represent the truth by any measure. There is no place in American democracy for white supremacy. Period. But because there will always be a place in America for freedom of expression, even when it’s hateful, we must counter the hate and falsehoods by shining a light on the facts.

Truth telling, of course, is the essence of both teaching and learning. Within the University of California community of students, faculty and staff, we can draw on academic expertise and shared values to speak out against intoleranc­e. That might require only an email or a letter, published commentary or a call to an elected official. Whether it’s a professor illuminati­ng forgotten episodes of our past, or students peacefully expressing themselves, it’s important that we muster the collective will to participat­e fully in the public square.

This is an undertakin­g that is a marathon, not a sprint. We have generation­s of work to do, and the next generation­s to educate. The stakes are high.

 ?? Jim Wilson / New York Times ?? Demonstrat­ors speak out during a “Stand Against Hate” rally Sunday at Martin Luther King Jr. Civic Center Park in Berkeley.
Jim Wilson / New York Times Demonstrat­ors speak out during a “Stand Against Hate” rally Sunday at Martin Luther King Jr. Civic Center Park in Berkeley.

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